Friday, February 24, 2012

We all have a plot. Family fights during my childhood, spine surgery when I was a fifteen, leaving high school, getting my GED, and pursuing writing are all events that have happened in my life. These events make up the plot of my own personal story just as the events that occur in a book, which connect the beginning, middle and end, are a part of a stories plot.

Now that you know how to start and end your story, you can begin planning the rest of your novel. I like to write, in a few words, what I want to happen in the beginning of the story at the very top of a piece of paper, and then a few words to describe the end of the story at the very bottom of that same piece of paper. When that is done, I fill in the rest of the paper with the events that link the beginning of the story to the end.

This is the detailed plot for the third story of my series. There is no greater feeling than being able to cross off events after you write them!Photo by Chrys Fey

Don’t rush this process! You can’t hurry brilliance. The longer you think about your story idea, the more you will know just what you want to put in it.

Let your imagination carry you away to the world of your book. Greet your characters, get to know them, and picture their lives playing out in front of you. You know their beginning and you know their end. What happens to them in-between those two points? What do they do?

Throughout my fourth book, there will be bombings and deaths of characters, but there will also be a birth of a child and blooming love.

Friday, February 17, 2012

The stories of our lives begin the moment we are born, with our very first breath. Our childhoods and twenties are the beginning of our stories, and our thirties and forties are the middle of our stories. Our golden years make up the climax and “the end” happens with our last breath.

Every day we live, we are writing our own secret book. And just like our lives, every story has a beginning, middle and end.

Photo by Chrys Fey

﻿﻿The beginning of a book is obviously the beginning of the story. This is the time to introduce the characters (make the readers fall in love with them or hate them, depending on the character’s role). This is also the time to tell the reader what they must know to understand the story, such as the main characters past.

The middle is where the reader knows all the characters and understands the story. This is the moment where the plot is building to the climax.

And the end is the grand finale where the story ends (happily, with tears, or with a shock!). Everything that has happened in the story now makes sense. You have brought the bad characters to their demise, and the main character has finally learned or conquered what they were set out to learn or conquer throughout the entire story. Or if you're writing a romance, the two main characters are finally and truly in love. The end is always the moment that the readers are waiting for with abated breath.

Photo by Chrys Fey

Shortly after I get an idea for a story, I know just how I want it to begin and end. The book I am writing now starts with the birth of a child and ends with a war. Interesting, right?

﻿ As soon as you get an idea for a story and have the fundamentals of your novel down (genre, characters, setting, and tone) then it is time to feed that little spark and help it grow into a flame. Ponder your story idea, and listen to some music as you drink a cup of coffee. Heck, drink a glass of wine or a nice cold beer, and let the beginning and end of your story come to you. It will.

QUESTION: Have you read a book with a plot that kept you captivated from beginning to end?

Two books that I’ve read in the past year come to mind because I had practically devoured them. The first is “After the Night” by Linda Howard. This book has the steamiest romance scenes that I’ve ever read! It’s also very shocking! The second book is “Chill Factor” by Sandra Brown. Right from the beginning I was hooked. The suspense drove me nuts!

Friday, February 10, 2012

The mid-January air felt like ice. It clawed at her cheeks as she wandered through the woods, not knowing where she was or where she was going. Her feet were numb from the white snow that devoured the whole land, and her breath was coming out in thick clouds. A cap of snow blossomed atop her head; cold flakes tangled in her dark hair and stuck on her curled lashes.

Everywhere she looked she could see snow. The trees were white from root to branch and the sky above was smothered in gray cotton.

Maybe she got away, was her only thought as her frozen fingers clutched her winter coat. Her heart was pounding against her shivering chest and her teeth were chattering from both the frigid weather and fright. "Why was he trying to kill her? She didn’t do anything!

Exhausted from escaping near death, she laid her back against the trunk of a nearly invisible tree and closed her eyes to catch her breath, which was becoming more and more labored as if icicles were hanging from inside her lungs.

She was so caught up in trying to get her breathing back to normal that she didn’t hear the muffled footsteps behind her or see the gloved hand that swooped around her face just before it slammed over her mouth.

I took this picture when I was in Michigan in 2009.Photo by Chrys Fey

Two other factors that create a story are setting and tone.

The setting can be any place imaginable such as New York City, China, or even Mars. But who says the setting has to be real? You can create your own town or a whole new world!

The setting can be as simple as a school (Harry Potter) or a hotel (The Shining). Some settings may include a date (for a historical novel) or a season. A romance novel can be set in July for a sweet and steamy summer romance, while a horror novel can be set in January for a scary and chilling read.

My short teaser in the beginning of this blog is set in the woods in the middle of January during a snow and ice storm.

I took this picture when I was in Michigan in 2009.Photo by Chrys Fey

﻿The tone of a book is how you write (how the author feels). The tone for my teaser could be considered urgent and frightened.

While tone should come naturally as you write other examples of tone are: humorous, serious, mournful, happy, guilty, and condescending. Tone can also change throughout the story much like our tones (aka attitudes) can change throughout the day.

Friday, February 3, 2012

We don’t just read books for the plots, but for the characters. We are following their lives, listening to their conversations, and even intruding on their most intimate moments. We befriend them and sympathize with what they are going through. Sometimes we laugh at them or we cry with them. Every now and then, we even fear for them. That is why you must treat the characters in your novel as though they are real people in your life. (If they live in your head, they are as good as real.)

When you have a story idea and picked a genre, the next step in writing a novel is to build your characters. All of the characters in your novel need personalities and quirks. Is one of your characters sweet and shy, or mean and dangerous? Bring it out in your writing. For example, a shy character can blush fuchsia, and a mean character can grind his teeth in aggravation.

I gave the butt-kicking female protagonist in my series many of my personality traits like my “god-like” anger and lack of patience –especially when she’s trying to catch a criminal. Could you give your main character a few of your charming (or less than charming) traits?

You don't want your characters to look like this in your readers' minds eye.Photo by Chrys Fey

Your characters also need appearances. After all, you are creating people. Give them hair/eye colors and body structures, but be creative when you are describing them in your book and let your creativity for words shine. Don’t just give a character green eyes and blonde hair. Instead, say they have green eyes the color of fresh cut grass and 24-karot gold hair.

Project: Grab a few sheets of paper and a pen. At the top of the paper, write the characters name and make a profile for them like so:

Age:

Hair color:

Eye color:

Body Type:

Personality:

Occupation:

Add any other relevant information, but don’t forget to have fun!

Other details you may want to consider when you’re creating your characters is their past. Does their past influence the story you are telling? Do they have fears and/or weaknesses that can come into play later in your book? What are their flaws? You can't create perfect characters, because we are, after all, not perfect.

You also need to figure out what each of your characters is going to do in your novel. What is their purpose? Their purpose can be as simple as being comedic relief to being the villain. I have a character in my series whose purpose is to be funny, witty, and sexual. But she also has an important role as the medical examiner.

QUESTION: Obviously, the characters we create are our personal favorites, but is there a character from a book (that is not your own) who you absolutely love?